The Woman He Shouldn’t Have Lost

The Woman He Shouldn’t Have Lost

last updateLast Updated : 2026-07-02
By:  Sir JoshUpdated just now
Language: English
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She gave him everything—her youth, her loyalty, her heart. And he repaid her with betrayal. Publicly discarded by her powerful husband, Adrian, and replaced by his mistress, Serena was left broken… carrying his child while losing the love of the son she already had. To the world, she became a forgotten woman. But years later, Serena returns. No longer weak, she is now the untouchable force behind a global empire—cold, powerful, and impossible to control. As her ex-husband’s obsession reignites and the woman who stole her life grows desperate, the truth begins to surface… especially to the child who once turned his back on her. This time, Serena isn’t here for love. She’s here for power. For truth. For revenge. And when she’s done, nothing and no one will ever be the same.

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Chapter 1

Chapter 1: The Night Everything Burned

The night they destroyed me, I was wearing white.

I remember that detail more than anything else. The dress Adrian had approved, the one I had chosen because white meant purity and love and all the things I still believed in then. I smoothed it twice before I stepped out of the car. I told myself the evening would be perfect.

I was so stupid.

The Blackwood Charity Gala was the kind of event that demanded you perform happiness. Crystal chandeliers hung over a crowd of people who had never once in their lives needed charity from anyone. The air smelled like money, old and thick, laced with expensive perfume and the quiet confidence of people who had never been truly afraid. I walked in on Adrian’s arm. Or I thought I did. Looking back, I was hanging on, and he was already somewhere else entirely.

He kissed my cheek at the entrance. His lips were dry.

I should have known right then.

“Serena.” His mother, Evelyn, appeared from the left, draped in slate grey, her smile the kind that never reached her eyes. “You look lovely.”

“Thank you, Evelyn.”

She held my hand a beat too long, her fingers cool against mine, and her gaze slid past me to something behind my shoulder. I turned. I don’t know why I turned. Some instinct, some animal pull toward danger, the kind your body knows before your mind catches up.

There was a woman standing near the far end of the room.

She was laughing at something a man in a navy suit had said, her head tilted, one hand resting lightly on her collarbone. She was beautiful in that aggressive, effortless way that made you feel like your own reflection was a mistake. Dark hair. A red dress that fit her like intention. And she was pregnant.

Obviously, unmistakably pregnant.

The room kept moving around me. Glasses clinked. Someone laughed too loudly near the bar. A string quartet played something low and sweet in the corner. I stood there in my white dress and felt the first crack, just a hairline fracture, somewhere in the center of my chest.

“Who is that?” I asked. I don’t know why I asked Adrian. I think I already knew.

He didn’t flinch. That was the part that would come back to me later, in the dark, in the years after. He didn’t flinch at all.

“Lila Monroe,” he said. “She’s important to me.”

I looked at him. “Important.”

“Serena.” His voice was flat. Patient in the way that people are patient when they’ve already made a decision and are simply waiting for you to catch up. “I was going to tell you privately. I didn’t want it to go like this.”

The string quartet finished their song. Applause scattered across the room like dry leaves.

“Tell me what,” I said. “Tell me what, Adrian.”

He took a slow breath. “Lila and I have been together for two years. She’s carrying my child.” He paused. “I want a divorce.”

Two years.

I did the math without meaning to. Two years ago, I had surprised him at his office with lunch because I’d read somewhere that small gestures kept marriages alive. Two years ago, we had celebrated our anniversary on a rooftop in Tuscany and he had told me I was the only constant in his life. Two years ago, I had started to quietly hope that maybe we were finally in a good place.

The crack spread.

Someone was speaking at the front of the room now, thanking the Blackwood family for their continued generosity. Applause again. I stood completely still, my champagne glass growing warm in my hand, and I understood, in the visceral and airless way that you understand something when your body learns it before your brain does, that everyone in this room already knew. The careful glances. Evelyn’s hand held too long. The way the staff had seated me beside Adrian with too much deliberate intention, the way you seat someone you feel sorry for.

They all knew.

I was the only person in this room who had walked in still believing in my own marriage.

“Serena.” Adrian’s voice again. “Say something.”

I looked across the room at Lila Monroe. She was watching me now. Not unkindly. Almost curiously, like I was a problem that had been solved and she was simply observing the clean aftermath. Her hand rested on her belly. Quiet. Certain.

And then I heard a voice behind me.

“Mom?”

Ethan.

My son was thirteen then, lanky and serious, already too much like his father in the jaw and the eyes. He had been somewhere in the back with Adrian’s nephew. Now he stood three feet away from me with an expression I had never seen on his face before: something between apology and distance, like he was already practicing the version of this memory he planned to keep.

“Dad told me,” he said. Quietly. Not cruelly. Just as a fact. “He told me last week.”

Last week.

Last week I had packed Ethan’s gym bag and reminded him to drink water at practice and texted Adrian a photo of the sunset from our kitchen window because I thought it was pretty and I still, stupidly, thought he would care.

The champagne glass slipped from my fingers.

I don’t remember catching it. I don’t remember if it shattered or if someone took it from me or if I simply set it down with some automatic, performed composure. I remember the sound of the room continuing around me, unbothered, relentless. I remember the chandeliers blurring at the edges. I remember thinking that I was pregnant too, eight weeks along, and that I had not yet told Adrian because I was waiting for the right moment.

I pressed my hand against my stomach. Just once. Just briefly.

Then I walked out.

No scene. No tears. No final words. I walked through that gilded room in my white dress and I did not look back at my husband or my son or the woman who had taken my life and tried it on like a coat she’d been measured for.

I walked out.

And the worst part, the part that would take me years to understand, was that no one tried to stop me.

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